The Shenyang J-6 first flew in 1958. It was a Soviet-designed swept-wing day-fighter that hit Mach 1.45 if you held your nose right and didn’t mind a fuel range of about 700 kilometres. The Chinese kept building it until 1981, retired the last from front-line service in 2010, and parked the survivors in long, sun-bleached rows along its eastern coast.
For fifteen years the world assumed those rows were scrap. They are not. New satellite imagery shows the People’s Liberation Army Air Force has been quietly converting hundreds of stored J-6s — gutting the cockpit, fitting an autopilot, and giving each one a new designation: J-6W. The W stands for wuren — unmanned.
And several hundred of them, possibly more, are now lined up at PLA airbases pointed straight at Taiwan.
Quick Facts
Aircraft: Shenyang J-6W (drone-converted J-6 / MiG-19 clone)
Original role: Mach 1.45 swept-wing day-fighter, in service 1958-2010
Estimated stockpile: 500-1,500 airframes in long-term storage
Conversion concept: One-way kamikaze, EW jammer, or radar-soaker decoy
Deployment: PLA bases opposite Taiwan: Fuzhou, Longtian, Pingtan
Strategic role: Saturation attack to overwhelm Taiwanese air defences

From Junkyard to Cruise Missile
The maths is brutal. A Patriot interceptor costs around $4 million. A modern Western surface-to-air missile system processes incoming threats in roughly the same way regardless of whether they cost $20,000 or $20 million. If you fire fifty supersonic targets at once, the system runs out of either missiles or processing capacity. Whichever fails first, you have a saturation success.
That is the J-6W’s only job. Strip out the pilot. Fit a basic INS-GPS autopilot. Bolt on a 500-kilo warhead, or in some variants a chaff dispenser or radar jammer, or simply leave the airframe empty and use it as a sacrificial radar magnet. Launch hundreds in a single wave. Most will be shot down. Some will get through. Almost all of them will eat a Patriot.
The Saturation Doctrine
Open-source analysts have tracked PLA airbases at Fuzhou, Longtian, and Pingtan adding new revetments and apron space sized for the J-6’s nine-metre wingspan. Imagery from late April shows several hundred airframes in apparent flying condition, parked nose-out as if ready for engine starts.

Taiwan’s air defence depends on a fixed number of Patriot, NASAMS and Sky Bow batteries, plus its mobile Sky Sword missiles. Even at the optimistic estimate of 90% kill rate, a 500-airframe wave puts 50 weapons through to Taiwanese targets — enough to shut down runways, communications nodes, and air-defence radars in the opening hours of any conflict. It also empties Taiwan’s interceptor stockpile in a way that cannot be replaced before the second wave arrives.
The 1958 Solution to the 2026 Problem
The J-6W programme is, in a way, deeply embarrassing for the West: a 67-year-old Soviet design has been turned into one of the most effective counters to two trillion dollars of Western air-defence investment. It is also a reminder that quantity has a quality of its own — a Stalin-era observation that has not aged a day.
Whether the J-6Ws ever fly remains to be seen. But the fact that they exist, in those numbers, on those bases, is now baked into every Pentagon and Taipei war-game scenario for the rest of the decade.
Sources: Army Recognition, Janes, satellite imagery via Planet Labs, Naval News.




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